A wheelchair in the Cape Flats (South Africa). Negotiating one's mobility and identity with a locomotor disability

IF 0.9 Q4 REHABILITATION
Marie Schnitzler
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

As a tool for social participation and inclusion, the wheelchair constitutes an interesting entry point to study the everyday experience of people with physical disabilities. This paper offers to discuss how people learn to use the wheelchairs, how they move with them, and how the chair influences their inclusion. Based on an eighteen-month ethnography in a Coloured township in Cape Town (South Africa), such a reading of the wheelchair calls for a relational and intersectional approach of citizenship. Defined broadly as one's relationship to their body, their environment, their relatives, and the State, citizenship is experienced through a web of social, institutional, and material relationships. This approach ultimately raises issues of inclusion, belonging, and stigmatisation. After presenting the context of the research, I discuss the notions of active citizenship, modern citizenship and the right to the city. The conclusion comes back to the ideas of relational and intersectional citizenship as a way forward for research in disability studies and in South Africa.

南非开普平原上的轮椅。与运动障碍协商一个人的行动能力和身份
作为一种社会参与和包容的工具,轮椅是研究身体残疾人士日常经历的一个有趣的切入点。本文提出讨论人们如何学习使用轮椅,他们如何与他们一起移动,以及椅子如何影响他们的包容。基于对南非开普敦一个有色人种小镇长达18个月的人种志研究,对轮椅的解读需要一种关系性和交叉性的公民权研究方法。公民身份被广泛地定义为一个人与自己的身体、环境、亲属和国家的关系,是通过社会、制度和物质关系的网络来体验的。这种方法最终引发了包容、归属和污名化的问题。在介绍了本文的研究背景之后,本文讨论了积极公民权、现代公民权和城市权的概念。结论又回到了关系型和交叉型公民身份作为残疾研究和南非研究的前进方向。
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期刊介绍: ALTER is a peer-reviewed European journal which looks at disability and its variations. It is aimed at everyone who is involved or interested in this field. ALTER is an emblematic Latin word for all forms of difference, leaving open the question of their nature and expression. An inter-disciplinary journal First and foremost, interdisciplinarity means remaining open to all human and social sciences: sociology, anthropology, psychology, psychoanalysis, history, demography, epidemiology, economics, law, etc. It also means a connection between the different forms of knowledge - academic and fundamental - applied and relating to the experience of disability.
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